Oh look, it’s sportswear turned chic street wear. We haven’t seen that in a while. To be fair, Nicklas Kunz’s take thereon is rather fantastic. And if it’s immediately reminiscent of what we’re seeing plenty of right now, then let us call it current and timely and relevant, and all those things that actually make enormous sense for a young brand such as this. What’s also really notable about Kunz’s SS15 offering is the attention to linear detail. The significance of lines is often foregone at the expense of other techniques, or even bells and whistles, but from a very basic, graphic perspective, it’s those points at which colours are broken, or shapes are formed, that silhouettes are defined. With the silhouette comes the designer’s resolutely masculine aesthetic. And here it really is masculine: despite the skirts and the longline tops, there is a rigidity to be remarked, as well as a focus drawn to areas of the body that renders a completely macho, overtly virile, almost sexualised sense of who the Kunz man is. The combination of this with those longer lengths of fabric, which might resonate more traditionally with a feminine aesthetic, creates a modern expression – or even definition – of masculinity. To an extent, this is modern masculinity.